Abstract

Geckos feature a large range of eye sizes, but what drives this phenotypic diversity is currently unknown. Earlier studies point towards diel activity patterns (DAPs) and locomotory mode, but phylogenetic comparative studies in support of the proposed adaptive mode of eye evolution are lacking. Here, we test the hypothesis of DAPs as the driver of eye size evolution with a dataset on 99 species of gecko. Results from phylogenetic generalized least-square analysis (PGLS) and multivariate model-fitting reveal smaller eyes in diurnal geckos consistent with different phenotypic optima. However, Bayesian analyses of selective regime shifts demonstrate that only two of nine transitions from nocturnal to diurnal activity are coupled with decreases in eye size, and two other regime shifts are not associated with DAP transitions. This non-uniform evolutionary response suggests that eye size is not the only functionally relevant variable. Evolutionary adaptations may therefore include different combinations of several traits (e.g. photoreceptors), all with the same functional outcome. Our results further demonstrate that DAP only partially explains eye size diversity in geckos. As open habitats favour the evolution of large eyes while obstructed habitats favour small eyes, the degree of habitat clutter emerges as another potential axis of eye diversification.

Highlights

  • One of the grand challenges in biology is to elucidate the origins of phenotypic diversity [1,2,3,4]

  • Gecko eye size evolution is expected to be governed by an evolutionary trade-off between selective benefits of visual performance and the cost associated with larger eyes

  • While published data substantiate an association between nocturnal activity and large eyes [6,7], it is unknown if these eye size differences arise within evolutionary transitions between diel activity patterns (DAPs), as expected in an adaptive scenario

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Summary

Introduction

One of the grand challenges in biology is to elucidate the origins of phenotypic diversity [1,2,3,4]. Gecko eye size evolution is expected to be governed by an evolutionary trade-off between selective benefits of visual performance and the cost associated with larger eyes. The origin of geckos is nocturnal, but there are many independent evolutionary transitions to diurnal and cathemeral/crepuscular activity patterns [11], offering repeated opportunities to observe organism–environment coevolution.

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